Vancouver Olympics security needs stretched law enforcement: Wikileaks U.S. embassy cable

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      Security requirements related to the 2010 Winter Olympics spread B.C. law enforcement agencies critically thin, the latest Wikileaks cable reveals.

      According to a diplomatic communiqué sent from the U.S. Consulate in Vancouver and made public today (December 21) by the Guardian, in the wake of the Olympics, the RCMP was forced to curtail certain operations such as drug-related investigations and focus efforts on preparing for the Games.

      It goes on to state that the Olympics were beginning to “create critical resource costs.”

      “Law enforcement representatives working at the U.S. Consulate in Vancouver are reporting that more and more of their contacts are being pulled to work on Olympics security issues,” the cable reads. “A DEA agent was told by one of his RCMP counterparts that by September all regional drug agents could be working on Olympics, with no investigations ongoing until March 2010. Already the RCMP has all but stopped marijuana-related investigations.”

      The dispatch also draws attention to the fact that “no one is willing to give a number” when it came to total security costs for the Olympics, explaining that “The provincial Finance Minister, Colin Hansen, will only say it's somewhere between C$400 million and C$1 billion.”

      Sections related to security read in full:

      5. (U) Perhaps the biggest loss will be taken by the province of British Columbia and the Government of Canada (GOC) which will bear the brunt of cost overruns in the security of the games. The Integrated Security Unit (ISU) was set up to manage the Games' security. It is headed by the RCMP, with representative from all major police, intelligence and defense entities. Original estimates on Olympics security were in the C$175 million range. But now no one is willing to give a number. The provincial Finance Minister, Colin Hansen, will only say it's somewhere between C$400 million and C$1 billion. Hansen admits he was surprised at the estimates coming out of Ottawa for overall security. A special committee was established early on to determine B.C.'s and the GOC's shares of incremental costs above basic policing. The ballooning nature of the security structure and programs has left the committee bogged down in "endless line-by-line micro-analysis," according to Hansen. Consequently the Province offered up a final, comprehensive plan on who pays what which is in Ottawa for approval. Realistically, as the ISU tests and refines its plans, the costs continue to be fluid and the final numbers will not be known until after the Games are completed. BCoriginally estimated its overall Games' costs, including infrastructure, venues and security, at approximately C$600 million. Minister Hansen announced on February 9 that the new security numbers will force the province well over that mark. With 2009 a provincial election year in BC, the cost of Games' security is becoming a major issue for the ruling BC Liberals, who are hoping a reasonable agreement with the GOC will soften the financial blow.

      6. (C) Beyond monetary costs, the Olympics are beginning to create critical resource costs. Law enforcement representatives working at the U.S. Consulate in Vancouver are reporting that more and more of their contacts are being pulled to work on Olympics security issues. A DEA agent was told by one of his RCMP counterparts that by September all regional drug agents could be working on Olympics, with no investigations ongoing until March 2010. Already the RCMP has all but stopped marijuana-related investigations. RCMP is also undergoing severe belt tightening with new, stricter enforcement of overtime rules. To highlight the Canadian constraints, an RCMP officer told us that the Italians put 30,000 Carabinieri in Turin for the 2006 Winter Games and the RCMP has less than 30,000 officers in all of Canada.

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      Comments

      3 Comments

      real news plase

      Dec 21, 2010 at 12:24pm

      So the RCMP was stretched thin, so what?

      How about we see some stats as to the increase of drug-trafficking and murders during the weeks RCMP was pre-occupied?

      This is why you don't host the Olympics!

      @real news

      Dec 21, 2010 at 10:13pm

      I think the idea here is to suggest the spectacle of the Olympics had becomes so all consuming that the policing of actual crimes was forgotten. Its typical and it just goes to show how the precariousness of the spectacle makes it all the more spectacular. Now the state and the IOC can talk about what a good job they did despite so many obstacles blah blah blah as if the public have never heard such bullshit before.

      John S.

      Dec 22, 2010 at 3:09am

      real news please: "How about we see some stats as to the increase of drug-trafficking and murders during the weeks RCMP was pre-occupied?"

      Uh... well, with the police stretched so thin, reported and investigated crimes should theoretically *decrease*, not increase.